Altered and Adorned Using Renaissance Prints in Daily Life Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Kimberly Nichols

Series:
Art Institute of Chicago
Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
10 Jun 2011
ISBN:
9780300169119
Dimensions:
104 pages: 304 x 228 x 15mm
Illustrations:
10 black-&-white illustrations + 80 colour images

Today Renaissance-era prints are typically preserved behind glass or in solander boxes in museums, but these decorative objects were once a central part of everyday life. "Cut, Colored, and Collected" is a delightful, surprising look at how prints were used to create sewing patterns, affixed on walls, glued into albums and books, and in some instances even annotated, handcoloured, or cut apart. This handsome volume introduces readers to the experimental world of printmaking in the mid-15th and 16th centuries and the array of objects it inspired, from illustrated books and sculptures to etched armour and printed sundials. It features many never-before-published treasures from the Art Institute of Chicago's rich permanent collection, along with essays on such topics as three-dimensional scientific prints and how famous paintings were reproduced on functional objects such as playing cards.

Suzanne Karr Schmidt is Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial Fellow in Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago. Kimberly Nichols is Associate Conservator in Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Page spreads